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Max More's avatar

Excellent, as always.

I'm puzzled by the idea that an increase in global temperature of a fraction of a degree to a degree could cause any noticeable increase in fires. Is it not the case that most of the warming is at night and at the poles? And how can such a small increase have any significant effect on combustibility? Can such a small, gradual change really cause enough drying? I'm not saying it's impossible, just that it seems highly implausible.

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Pat Robinson's avatar

Great piece Roger.

Thanks for data, it’s all we’ve got with the climate/insane.

First, pet peeve as I live in Alberta.

Fires started by humans are not wild fires, they are “fires”.

We had a hotter than average May after a cold crappy winter and everyone rushed out to the countryside to take advantage and boom, fires everywhere within 2 days and no way to fight them as just too many all at once.

Stop starting fires and this would just be the nicest May in a decade.

That’s the entire story. 95% human caused.

Peeve 2.

I’m in Vienna this week and the only English Channel I get is Skynews which seems to be trying to overtake the BBC in hairbrained hair on fire climate alarmism for Britain. They are playing a loop about the smoke in NYC talking about how it started in the west of canada “then spread to eastern canada”, as though the whole country is on fire, buttressing it with a continental smoke map that basically shows the position of the jet stream which also explains why it’s hot and dry where it is.

It’s very misleading and if I was like most people instead of being someone who “reads” and “thinks” it would be very easy to fall for it.

Don’t even get me going on their other loop today about sea ice, just wrong wrong wrong.

Infuriating.

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